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Good but not game changing: what do we think of BA’s new First Class cabin?

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On Monday, British Airways revealed its new First Class cabin (click here for our article) which it will install across its A380 fleet with a view to have it flying in mid 2026. It has called it ‘game changing’.

To recap, this will be a 1-2-1 configuration featuring:

  • an ultra-wide seat (36.5 inches) with a bed length of 6’5″ or 200cm
  • cocooning five foot (152cm) curved walls (and doors)
  • multi-purpose ottoman facilitating buddy dining
  • 32-inch 4K TV screen
  • electronic window blinds
  • adjustable mood lighting with scenes including ‘relax’, ‘dine’ and ‘cinema’
British Airways new First Class seat

The seat will also be installed on the Boeing 777X fleet when those arrive, likely in 2027 depending on what goes on at Boeing. BA has 18 of the larger 777-9X variant on order and we expect to see the new First Class cabins on all of them.

What is not clear is whether this seat will eventually be retrofitted on existing aircraft. British Airways recently finished refurbishing its existing 777 fleet, many of which feature the existing First product.

The Boeing 787-9 fleet is due to be refurbished over the coming years. It would be a missed opportunity not to upgrade the First Class cabin at the same time that Club Suite is installed on those, although the new suite may simply be too big and heavy to fit.

New versus old: what’s changed?

Let’s start with a quick comparison of the new cabin versus the existing seat. Above is a photo of the new seat whilst below you’ll see the latest version of BA’s existing First Class. This was originally introduced in 2010 but updated a couple of times including the addition of a door in 2020:

BA First Suite

The first thing to note is that BA has moved away from an angled seat to a forward-facing, full width seat.

Whilst the current First seat has always been more spacious than its herringbone business class counterparts, the lack of tessellation means the seat has widened substantially, from 21.5″ to 36.5″ (27.5″ between armrests). This should give an even greater sense of space on board and means you’ll now have a fully rectangular sleeping area.

British Airways new First Class seat

The TV screen has also grown in size, from 24″ to 32″, although it also appears to be further away! It is smaller than the 40″+ screens we’ve seen recently from JAL and a handful of other airlines.

Buddy dining has been retained thanks to the multi-purpose ottoman. This was available on the existing A380 First Class seat but is not on the newer Boeing 787-10 fleet so it’s good to see this return.

The new seat features a LOT of storage space, including a personal wardrobe that can accommodate an entire trolley bag:

British Airways new First Class seat

One of my favourite features is the Concorde-inspired lamp, a stunning piece of industrial design:

British Airways new First Class seat

Visually, British Airways has ditched the cream and black colour scheme in favour of a combination of blue and beige tones. Assuming the renders are accurate, this looks very stylish and appears to take inspiration from Ozwald Boateng’s new uniforms, with the same navy and red accents.

Overall it’s a warmer, less stark design that hints at a more residential feel than the automotive-inspired previous First Class cabin. This is a trend we’re seeing across the industry, with airlines such as Cathay Pacific looking to luxury hotels for inspiration.

British Airways new First Class seat

It’s not game-changing, but ….

In its press release, BA called it ‘game changing’. I think we can all agree it isn’t.

That’s not a bad thing. Anyone expecting a revolutionary new seat to compete with the ultra-luxury offerings from Singapore Airlines, Etihad and other Asian and Middle Eastern airlines was surely barking up the wrong tree.

Even BA seems to admit this. The biggest claim in the press release is that it is ‘the only European carrier from the UK to offer a First product across the Atlantic.’ It’s not exactly a huge comparator set, and even this claim will fall away if/when Global Airlines launches with a First Class cabin.

The new First Class seat looks like a seat and not the (arguably over-the-top) cabins from Emirates, Singapore Airlines or Etihad. You don’t get your own room here: it is still, for all intents and purposes, a seat, albeit with very high five-foot walls. It’s more in line with recent First Class cabins unveiled by Japan Airlines, ANA and others.

In that respect it is a continuation of BA’s existing First Class strategy, offering a relatively large First Class cabin of at least eight seats (versus some airline’s three or four) but at more accessible price levels.

Here’s how many seats other airlines typically install in First Class:

  • Air France La Premiere: 4 seats
  • ANA: 8 seats
  • Cathay Pacific: 6 seats
  • Emirates: 8-14 seats
  • Etihad: 8-10 seats
  • Japan Airlines: 6 seats
  • Lufthansa Allegris: 3-4 seats
  • Qatar Airways: 8 seats

British Airways, meanwhile, will install 12 seats on the A380 and is expected to have eight seats on the Boeing 777X. It will therefore offer more First Class seats than most other airlines – and, of course, this is good news for anyone who wants to fly them via an Avios redemption. Not many of the seats listed above are freely available for miles.

British Airways new First Class seat

Can the soft product keep up?

The new seat is an excellent evolution of First Class on BA. To be fair, British Airways has always offered a comfortable seat for passengers in First.

The big unanswered question is whether BA will upgrade the soft product and service it offers to First Class passengers. With the new seat in place, there are a lot of improvements BA could make to elevate its First Class experience even further.

Let’s start with the service, which can be inconsistent. Crew can be handing out water in short-haul Euro Traveller one day and expected to advise on wine pairings in First the next. A new ‘First Service Specialists’ training programme is helping, with the four-day course training crew how to serve food, provide a turndown service and recommend wine pairings.

British Airways comes in for a lot of criticism regarding the cleanliness and maintenance of its cabins, so it’ll be interesting to see how the new seat (and in particular, the lighter seat fabrics) will age.

The John Horsfall bedding, with 400 thread count sheets, is already luxurious although I would love to see BA introduce a thick, fitted mattress topper. Virgin Atlantic offers this on its A350s and it is excellent.

British Airways new First Class

Compared to other airlines, the food and drink offering is poor. Singapore Airlines recently announced it would start serving Cristal 2015 champagne to First Class passengers, although I doubt we’ll see BA follow suit!

In a little highlighted part of Brunchgate, one of my favourite parts of the First Class meal service – the canapé tray – was recently replaced with a pre-departure tray of olives, nuts and cheese straws.

On the ground at Heathrow, the First Wing is always a pleasure and the Concorde Room’s a la carte dining is acceptable. But whilst other airlines offer a lounge-to-plane private chauffeur in luxury cars, BA’s First Class passengers must hike down to the crowded transit train with everyone else – not exactly a luxury experience.

Ultimately, however, it all comes down to where British Airways wants to position the product. The current First Class seat is often priced at a fixed £1,000 more than Club during sales, substantially less than you might pay for First on competing airlines.

We asked Cirium to calculate some First pricing data for us. It showed that, compared to BA, a typical First Class seat was 14% more expensive on Etihad, 24% more on Qatar Airways (limited F network), 27% more on Luthansa, 32% more on Cathay Pacific and 33% more on Emirates.

If BA chooses to move upmarket I would expect fares to rise in parallel, although some A380 routes will struggle to sell 12 First Class seats at a true premium price.

Conclusion

Calling the new cabin ‘game changing’ is a misnomer. BA’s new First Class is not a game changer, nor does it need to be.

What the new cabin offers is a spacious and private suite that is well appointed and stylish. It is impressive just how much it packs into what is a relatively small space: oodles of storage on the inside and outside of the suite, including for jackets, trolley bags and hand bags; a 27.5″ wide bed, an ottoman with the option of buddy dining and a large 32″ screen.

In that regard, BA’s new A380 First Class seat is a more traditional First Class seat. British Airways is not trying to reinvent the wheel here. Based on what we’ve seen so far, this will be a comfortable and luxurious way to travel – assuming the rest of the onboard experience matches up.


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Comments (110)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Global First says:

    Seems a long time to wait for first new First to be available – the competition would have moved on in close to 1.5 to 2 Years surely ? Also A380 was not plane of choice and has had significant engineering issues…. let alone its carbon footprint – now is first for First ? Agree with the comments on Soft Product could make all the difference but doubt it will compared to Singapore, Emirates and others eg Krug in First ? Never (except the AA Lounge in Miami )…Virgin Atlantic IMO have ‘tight’ seats in UC which is not the same as First BA product but they win the day – as per other comments – on soft product – Staff that care and proactive eg offer you a drink etc and smile…The arm rests look odd to me also and the light coloured seating…mmm one bump with red wine and some sticky toffee pudding in your lap may leave a little something for the next lucky First customer – BA are very good at leaving a taste of the previous flights food on your seat for you to sit on….On a positive, on the 1-2-1 config- the full access seating on the 2 seating config is a good idea to leave it totally open (no divider if I saw correctly) , if chosen, when travelling with a partner. Overall about what I expected but no wow factor for me especially if the Soft Products do not improve for the money you pay – Availability for Avios redemptions will stay sparse I am sure. If you see any to anywhere I would grab them !

  • Novice says:

    Good analysis Rhys.

  • G says:

    They just need to fix the:
    Mobile App / back end IT issues.

    Engineering Issues

    Heavy US Network focus (who doesnt love second rate US cities).

    Food quality

    Brunchgate

    Service consistency

    • davidn says:

      Apparently, the new mobile app will be “rolled out by the end of March” according to a BA spokesperson.

  • G says:

    I personally don’t understand the dislike of this seat.

    The seat, looks modern and refined enough to look / feel a cut above Club Suite (probably the differentiator BA were striving / planning for) than competing outright with world leading F products like Emirates, JAL or Lufthansa.

    The closest F product I think this competes with (and wins) is older CX seating, Qantas Korean Air and AA.

    I’ve never heard a complaint – besides the NHS Mortuary style toilets – about the CCR, just the consistency of BA service and now brunchgate (food standards).

    As ever, you can have the best hard product – but that falls short if the catering and experience aren’t there. The good carriers nail the latter (AY, AF) – the best carriers nail both (JL).

    • Rhys says:

      Not sure when you last flew on Finnair but the catering is NOT a winning factor!

  • Smid says:

    Just as long as this time the seat recline works.

    It pretty much seemed broken around half the seats in “new first” last time I flew. If you’re not having trouble, then look out for the person complaining because they have the broken seat. I had one work was set up and luckily there was a seat set to lie flat across the cabin.

    Still, I got pretty much all the avios I paid for the trip back for this.

    • Cranzle says:

      It won’t. BA don’t seem to choose designs that wear well or last long and they make a concious decision not to maintain the interiors of their aircraft. Club Suite is a classic example of this.

      • Nick says:

        Nobody makes a conscious decision not to maintain anything. It’s one of those things that just slips away over time, mainly because there’s no time/money/whatever to do something. I get that conspiracy theories are attractive but there really is no one maliciously sitting in the background saying ‘we deliberately won’t maintain an expensive product’.

        • Rob says:

          BA has never had an issue with capex, but it has a serious issue with opex. Fundamentally anything that needs to go through the P&L as an expense (which a new seat doesn’t, because it is just capitalised and depreciated below the EBITDA line) is problematical.

          • daftboy says:

            A very good description of something I recognised but couldn’t quite put my finger on

          • LittleNick says:

            Do you know BA have take this approach/an issue with opex apart from stating the obvious like every other company? If they improved the onboard service/food yes opex goes up by they can command higher revenue larger than the cost increase and so profit margins would increase or have they deemed that their isn’t the market for that?

          • Rob says:

            The reality of life is that cost cuts show immediate savings (and any drop off from passengers moving elsewhere takes ages to appear and isn’t directly attributable) whilst revenue growth from improving your product takes time to appear, and there is never a causal link between the investment and the growth ….

            The BA dynamic is something else though. What do you think they save from scrapping the canapes in First? £1 per passenger? It’s literally no more than £500 per day saved. Under what scenario is that really worth alienating First passengers for?

          • Nick says:

            Rob has hit the nail on the head with capex vs opex. It’s an issue right across the company – once budgets are set, that’s it for the year (or realistically the next few years). So departments can redirect their existing spend pretty much wherever and whenever they want, but if they want ‘new’ money they have to go cap in hand and beg for it, from senior directors who make you feel as if you’re asking a shareholder for it personally. Good for proving to shareholders that they have good cost control, bad for managing ongoing product – all it takes is one supplier to increase prices more than inflation and you’re screwed.

            The begging process gets results for shiny new things that you can show off, but boring day-to-day spend isn’t sexy. So one by one things get shaved, until reviews get so bad they have to cough up – it’s not that they consciously decide to ignore something, more that they have little choice but to make haircuts. It’s even more frustrating when you then hear an engine went bang and engineering is immediately given an extra £10m to spend.

        • meta says:

          But that’s negligence which is equally bad.

        • JDB says:

          @Nick – I fear there is a conscious decision not to pay for adequate cleaning and maintenance. Cleanliness is a major gripe on short and long haul aircraft. I’m sure that you are aware of the significantly more in depth cleaning that is undertaken by other long haul carriers at Heathrow, away from their home bases vs BA at its home. Those airlines use far more staff and have proper detailed protocols that are properly supervised. A QR, EK or SQ will be immaculate on departure.

          BA recognised this some years back and had a deep cleaning programme but that was a one off and no real substitute for ongoing cleaning. Even in First one can open the table to find sticky ring marks and the seat is almost guaranteed to have ancient bits of food, earplugs etc.

          The absence of maintenance, saving some opex is a real waste of the capex spent eg on Club Suite many of which already look quite tatty.

  • chris w says:

    It reminds me of Qatars A380 F seat with a sliding door

  • Paul says:

    “ Assuming the renders are accurate, this looks very stylish and appears to take inspiration from Ozwald Boateng’s new uniforms, with the same navy and red accents.”

    Well that’s the kiss of death. The uniform looks like a Primark reject on almost every member of staff I have seen it on. There is no quality to it and it simply looks cheap.

    • vlcnc says:

      Disagree, it looks really smart. Light years ahead of that appalling untidy ill-fitting looking thing they kept for twenty years by the useless Julien Macdonald who had no ability to design a uniform, let alone one that was kept for that long.

    • JDB says:

      I’m not sure it’s Primark, but perhaps not very flattering for the average BA crew member. It looked quite elegant on the Beijing based crew members on a recent flight but on a subsequent CE flight the lovely crew member did not look good in her jumpsuit.

  • Paul says:

    I’d add that redirecting Concorde is surely a desperate attempt to live in the past! Concorde has been dead for over 20 years!

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